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Publications

by Keyword: Electronic equipment

del Moral Zamora B, Azpeitia JMÁ, Farrarons JC, Català PLM, Corbera AH, Juárez A, Samitier J, (2022). Towards Point-of-Use Dielectrophoretic Methods: A New Portable Multiphase Generator for Bacteria Concentration World Congress On Medical Physics And Biomedical Engineering: Radiation Oncology 41, 856-859

This manuscript presents portable and low cost electronic system for specific point-of-use dielectrophoresis applications. The system is composed of two main modules: a) a multiphase generator based on a Class E amplifier, which provides 4 sinusoidal signals (0°, 90°, 180°, 270°) at 1 MHz with variable output voltage up to 10 Vpp (Vm) and an output driving current of 1 A; and b) a dielectrophoresis-based microfluidic chip containing two interdigitated electrodes. The system has been validated by concentrating Escherichia Coli at 1 MHz while applying a continuous flow of 5 ?L/min. Device functionalities were verified under different conditions achieving a 83% trapping efficiency in the best case. © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2014.

JTD Keywords: bacteria, emulsifier, enterobacter, exopolysaccharide, Bacteria, Bacteria concentrations, Biochemical engineering, Cell concentrator, Class e amplifier, Class-e amplifier, Device functionality, Dielectrophoresis, Electronic equipment, Electronics, Electrophoresis, Emulsifier, Enterobacter, Escherichia coli, Exopolysaccharide, Inter-digitated electrodes, Lab-on-a-chip (loc), Low cost, Low costs, Low-cost electronics, Medical computing, Monosaccharide, Portable device, Power amplifiers, Trapping efficiencies


Darwish, Nadim., Aragonès, A. C., Darwish, T., Ciampi, S., Díez-Pérez, I., (2014). Multi-responsive photo- and chemo-electrical single-molecule switches Nano Letters 14, (12), 7064-7070

Incorporating molecular switches as the active components in nanoscale electrical devices represents a current challenge in molecular electronics. It demands key requirements that need to be simultaneously addressed including fast responses to external stimuli and stable attachment of the molecules to the electrodes while mimicking the operation of conventional electronic components. Here, we report a single-molecule switching device that responds electrically to optical and chemical stimuli. A light pointer or a chemical signal can rapidly and reversibly induce the isomerization of bifunctional spiropyran derivatives in the bulk reservoir and, consequently, switch the electrical conductivity of the single-molecule device between a low and a high level. The spiropyran derivatives employed are chemically functionalized such that they can respond in fast but practical time scales. The unique multistimuli response and the synthetic versatility to control the switching schemes of this single-molecule device suggest spiropyran derivatives as key candidates for molecular circuitry.

JTD Keywords: Molecular Electronics, Multi-Responsive Molecular Switches, Photo- and Chemo-Switches Spiropyran, Single-Molecule Conductance, STM Break-Junction, Electronic equipment, Isomerization, Molecular electronics, Photochromism, Electrical conductivity, Electronic component, Molecular switches, Single-molecule conductances, Single-molecule devices, Spiropyran derivatives, Spiropyrans, STM Break-Junction, Molecules